No, the noun 'dirt' is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance; it has no plural form.
The plural of drugstore is drugstores.
"Holidays" Add an "s" to holiday and you'll have your plural.
Just GPSs, or plural possession: GP-S's.
The plural is cardinals. Note that there is no apostrophe before the s.
The plural possessive form of "Lois" is "Loises'." This is because "Lois" is a plural noun, so to indicate possession by multiple Lois entities, you add an apostrophe after the plural form "Loises." The apostrophe comes after the "s" because the plural form already ends in "es."
The noun 'dirt' is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance; it has no plural form.
neither, actually no dirt exist other than political
The plural of a letter can be written using an apostrophe, which is usually not a valid way to form a plural. The plural spelling S's could also be a possessive, but Ss would probably be unclear. The phonetic version is esses, which is the plural of ess.
my - mi(s) your (singular, informal) - tu(s) your (singular+plural, formal)/his/her/their - su(s) our - nuestro(s)/nuestra(s) (male/female to match what is possessed) your (informal, plural) - vuestro(s)/vuestra(s) (male/female as above) The (s) is added if what is possessed is in the plural
The noun 'dirt' is an uncountable noun; a word for a substance, such as mud or dust; loose soil or earth.
The plural is a normal S plural, associates.
The plural is a normal S plural, races.
The plural of drugstore is drugstores.
The plural is a regular S plural, instruments.
Try writing this question in English. Most plural nouns do end in s. Perhaps you mean that you want a list of nouns that end in s but are not plural.
The plural of basketful is..........BASKETFUL´S
Plural because it has a "s." If you take off the "s'' it will become singular.